WELCOME TO EHOST.COM.NP

Monday, August 14, 2017

DJI adds an offline mode to its drones for clients with ‘sensitive operations’

ads space

DJI is working on a “local data mode” for its apps that prevents any data from being sent or received from the internet. The feature will be welcomed by many, but it’s hard not to attribute the timing and urgency of the announcement to the recent ban of DJI gear by the U.S. Army over unspecified “cyber vulnerabilities.”

“We are creating local data mode to address the needs of our enterprise customers, including public and private organizations that are using DJI technology to perform sensitive operations around the world,” said Brendan Schulman, the company’s VP of Policy and Legal Affairs, in a press release. The new feature should arrive before the end of September.

The Army memo, first published at Small UAS News and dated August 2, said that “due to increased awareness of cyber vulnerabilities associated with DJI products, it is directed that the U.S. Army halt use of all DJI products.”

It’s not clear what these vulnerabilities actually are, or whether the mere possibility of sensitive information being transmitted was enough to spook someone at HQ.

DJI’s flight control apps, from which users can launch and control drones, does indeed regularly phone home to make sure it is up to date, using current maps and so on. And if the user chose to, it would back up flight logs and media to DJI’s servers. But the online functions aren’t necessary for ordinary operation and flight, so local data mode doesn’t affect airworthiness or anything like that.

Although DJI was not made aware of the Army’s concerns ahead of time, the new mode has been in development for several months, according to the press release. So either a little bird told the company this was a possibility, or more likely it’s just a smart option to include when your craft and apps are being put into national security and life-and-death type situations.

A DJI representative told TechCrunch that today’s announcement isn’t in response to the memo. Schulman, however, told the New York Times that “the Army memo caused customers to express renewed concern about data security.”

These statements may seem contradictory, but it’s not hard to imagine that when a major client like the Army raises security concerns, others will join the chorus. So DJI can say the announcement today wasn’t in response to the memo — not directly, anyway. But chances are we wouldn’t be hearing about the feature until later had the memo not been publicized.

“We’re not responding to the Army, which has never explained its concerns to us,” explained Adam Lisberg, DJI’s corporate comms director for North America, in response to my inquiries along these lines. “We’re accelerating the rollout of something we’ve been working on for a while. We announced it today because enterprise customers with serious data security have made clear they need something like this for a while, and the Army memo reinforced that concern for them. So we’re addressing it quickly as part of our commitment to delivering what our enterprise customers need.”

It matters because DJI isn’t a military-specific drone maker the way a company like General Atomics, which makes Predators — though the chances of a Chinese company ever being so are slim to say the least. It’s also a matter of public image: they’re a company looking out for consumers and the occasional government contract, not a major participator in the military-industrial complex.

Clearly the company wants to signal that it takes its feature requests not from foreign governments, but from its valued users all over the globe, of which the Army happens to be one.

Source link

ads space
ADS SPACE

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Categories

Article How-to All Posts WordPress Android Web design Blogger Plugins CSS Google JQuery Plugins Programming Reviews Web Hosting Blogger Blogging Blogging Tips Tricks Web Development Facebook Git Internet Make Money Online Social Plugins Tips Tips and Tricks Tools Tutorials Windows WordPress Plugins Blogging Tips and Tricks Freebies GSM Google Analytics HTML How To's JavaScript Plugin Development S.E.O SEO SMS SmartPhone Social Media Tips amp; Tricks Top-Most Updates Webmaster Tools Whatsapp Applications Apps Blogger Basics Documentary Downloads Entertainment Gadgets Games Gmail Google AdSense Guest Post IPhone Make Money Blogging SVN Security Softwares Web Hosting Tips and Tricks Wordpress Tips Wordpress Tips and Tricks hostgator iOS Advertising Networks Advertising Technology Affiliates Antivirus Audience amp; Traffic Biography Blog post Blog post Blogger Blogger Errors Blogger Tips Blogger Tools Blogger Widget Blogosphere Bogger Widgets CSS selectors CSS symbols CSS3 Computer amp; Internet Content Writing Coupon Codes Data amp; Analytics Deleted blog Design DoubleClick for Publishers Email and newsletter marketting Email marketing Excel Tips Excel Tips and Tricks Facebook Tricks Feed Feedburner Feedburner subscribers Font Fun GitHub Giveaways Gmail primary inbox Gmail tabs Google sign-in Guides HTML amp; CSS HTML5 Infographics Inspirational Instagram Internet Marketing Internet Tips amp; Tricks Job Listings Knowledge Life Hacks Lists Make-Money Monetization amp; Conversion Monetize Navigation Online Marketing Other PHP Tutorials Passport Publishing amp; Content Quotes RSS Sidebar Smartphones Social Networking Status Tech Tech Blog Technology Telegram Themes UI / UX User Psychology amp; Research VB.Net Web Tools Web browser Widget Windows Tips Windows-10 ad viewability admin notice blogging tools bluehost cherry-pick clone cors custom scrollbar customizer dismissible notices duplicate post feed title git branch git clone gpg gpg2 hybridauth iPad icon font notice responsive wordpress theme same origin policy scrollbar signed git commit smartsvn theme customizer vcs wordpress theme wordpress themes

Blog Archive